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Home  »  The World’s Best Poetry  »  The Execution of Montrose

Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.

I. Patriotism

The Execution of Montrose

William Edmondstoune Aytoun (1813–1865)

  • [James Graham, Marquis of Montrose, was executed in Edinburgh, May 21, 1650, for an attempt to overthrow the Commonwealth and restore Charles II.]


  • COME hither, Evan Cameron!

    Come, stand behind my knee—

    I hear the river roaring down

    Toward the wintry sea.

    There ’s shouting on the mountain-side,

    There ’s war within the blast—

    Old faces look upon me,

    Old forms go trooping past.

    I hear the pibroch wailing

    Amidst the din of fight,

    And my dim spirit wakes again

    Upon the verge of night.

    ’T was I that led the Highland host

    Through wild Lochaber’s snows,

    What time the plaided clans came down

    To battle with Montrose.

    I ’ve told thee how the Southrons fell

    Beneath the broad claymore,

    And how we smote the Campbell clan

    By Inverlochy’s shore.

    I ’ve told thee how we swept Dundee,

    And tamed the Lindsays’ pride;

    But never have I told thee yet

    How the great Marquis died.

    A traitor sold him to his foes;—

    O deed of deathless shame!

    I charge thee, boy, if e’er thou meet

    With one of Assynt’s name—

    Be it upon the mountain’s side,

    Or yet within the glen,

    Stand he in martial gear alone,

    Or backed by armèd men—

    Face him as thou wouldst face the man

    Who wronged thy sire’s renown;

    Remember of what blood thou art,

    And strike the caitiff down!

    They brought him to the Watergate,

    Hard bound with hempen span,

    As though they held a lion there,

    And not a ’fenceless man.

    They set him high upon a cart—

    The hangman rode below—

    They drew his hands behind his back,

    And bared his noble brow.

    Then, as a hound is slipped from leash,

    They cheered the common throng,

    And blew the note with yell and shout,

    And bade him pass along.

    It would have made a brave man’s heart

    Grow sad and sick that day,

    To watch the keen, malignant eyes

    Bent down on that array.

    There stood the Whig west-country lords

    In balcony and bow;

    There sat their gaunt and withered dames,

    And their daughters all a-row.

    And every open window

    Was full as full might be

    With black-robed Covenanting carles,

    That goodly sport to see!

    But when he came, though pale and wan,

    He looked so great and high,

    So noble was his manly front,

    So calm his steadfast eye;—

    The rabble rout forbore to shout,

    And each man held his breath,

    For well they knew the hero’s soul

    Was face to face with death.

    And then a mournful shudder

    Through all the people crept,

    And some that came to scoff at him

    Now turned aside and wept.

    But onward—always onward,

    In silence and in gloom,

    The dreary pageant labored,

    Till it reached the house of doom.

    Then first a woman’s voice was heard

    In jeer and laughter loud,

    And an angry cry and a hiss arose

    From the heart of the tossing crowd:

    Then, as the Græme looked upward,

    He saw the ugly smile

    Of him who sold his king for gold—

    The master-fiend Argyle!

    The Marquis gazed a moment,

    And nothing did he say,

    But the cheek of Argyle grew ghastly pale,

    And he turned his eyes away.

    The painted harlot by his side,

    She shook through every limb,

    For a roar like thunder swept the street,

    And hands were clenched at him;

    And a Saxon soldier cried aloud,

    “Back, coward, from thy place!

    For seven long years thou hast not dared

    To look him in the face.”

    Had I been there with sword in hand,

    And fifty Camerons by,

    That day through high Dunedin’s streets

    Had pealed the slogan-cry.

    Not all their troops of trampling horse,

    Nor might of mailèd men—

    Not all the rebels in the south

    Had borne us backward then!

    Once more his foot on Highland heath

    Had trod as free as air,

    Or I, and all who bore my name,

    Been laid around him there!

    It might not be. They placed him next

    Within the solemn hall,

    Where once the Scottish kings were throned

    Amidst their nobles all.

    But there was dust of vulgar feet

    On that polluted floor,

    And perjured traitors filled the place

    Where good men sate before.

    With savage glee came Warriston

    To read the murderous doom;

    And then uprose the great Montrose

    In the middle of the room:

    “Now, by my faith as belted knight

    And by the name I bear,

    And by the bright St. Andrew’s cross

    That waves above us there—

    Yea, by a greater, mightier oath—

    And O that such should be!—

    By that dark stream of royal blood

    That lies ’twixt you and me—

    I have not sought in battle-field

    A wreath of such renown,

    Nor dared I hope on my dying day

    To win the martyr’s crown!

    “There is a chamber far away

    Where sleep the good and brave,

    But a better place ye have named for me

    Than by my father’s grave.

    For truth and right, ’gainst treason’s might,

    This hand has always striven,

    And ye raise it up for a witness still

    In the eye of earth and heaven.

    Then nail my head on yonder tower—

    Give every town a limb—

    And God who made shall gather them:

    I go from you to Him!”

    The morning dawned full darkly,

    The rain came flashing down,

    And the jagged streak of the levin bolt

    Lit up the gloomy town.

    The thunder crashed across the heaven,

    The fatal hour was come;

    Yet aye broke in, with muffled beat,

    The ’larum of the drum.

    There was madness on the earth below

    And anger in the sky,

    And young and old, and rich and poor,

    Came forth to see him die.

    Ah God! that ghastly gibbet!

    How dismal ’t is to see

    The great tall spectral skeleton,

    The ladder and the tree!

    Hark! hark! it is the clash of arms,—

    The bells begin to toll,—

    “He is coming! he is coming!

    God’s mercy on his soul!”

    One last long peal of thunder,—

    The clouds are cleared away,

    And the glorious sun once more looks down

    Amidst the dazzling day.

    “He is coming! he is coming!”

    Like a bridegroom from his room

    Came the hero from his prison

    To the scaffold and the doom.

    There was glory on his forehead,

    There was lustre in his eye,

    And he never walked to battle

    More proudly than to die.

    There was color in his visage,

    Though the cheeks of all were wan;

    And they marvelled as they saw him pass,

    That great and goodly man!

    He mounted up the scaffold,

    And he turned him to the crowd;

    But they dared not trust the people,

    So he might not speak aloud.

    But he looked upon the heavens,

    And they were clear and blue,

    And in the liquid ether

    The eye of God shone through:

    Yet a black and murky battlement

    Lay resting on the hill,

    As though the thunder slept within,—

    All else was calm and still.

    The grim Geneva ministers

    With anxious scowl drew near,

    As you have seen the ravens flock

    Around the dying deer.

    He would not deign them word nor sign,

    But alone he bent the knee;

    And veiled his face for Christ’s dear grace

    Beneath the gallows-tree.

    Then, radiant and serene, he rose,

    And cast his cloak away;

    For he had ta’en his latest look

    Of earth and sun and day.

    A beam of light fell o’er him,

    Like a glory round the shriven,

    And he climbed the lofty ladder

    As it were the path to heaven.

    Then came a flash from out the cloud,

    And a stunning thunder-roll;

    And no man dared to look aloft,—

    Fear was on every soul.

    There was another heavy sound,

    A hush, and then a groan;

    And darkness swept across the sky,—

    The work of death was done!